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parish churchyard. He had married twice; firstly
Elizabeth, daughter of Samuel Gott of London with whom he had at least three sons and secondly Judith, daughter of George Langham of London and widow of Thomas Bales of London, with whom he had at least ten children before her death in September 1668.
54:
When the Civil War broke out he enlisted as a
Parliamentarian and was commissioned a Colonel of horse and fought at the siege of Gloucester and in the north. He then refused to obey orders to join up with the rest of the army until he was paid, and was instead discharged. He acquired property in
59:. When the pro-Royalist Presbyterian mobs seized Westminster in the summer of 1647, he did not join the pro-Army Independents in fleeing to asylum with the army. He was one of the very few who actually changed sides and supported the army against the king at
50:
He was born the son of
Charles Harvey, a London merchant, and his wife Alice. He followed his father into trade, being apprenticed in 1619 and becoming a silk merchant and freeman of the Drapers' Company in 1627.
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Suffolk, where he was a deputy lieutenant in 1643, receiver-general for the county in 1644, and a keen member of the parliamentary committee from 1643 to 1645. In 1646 he was elected MP for
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and helped to draw up the final charge. Although present on 27 January 1649 when the death warrant was signed he did not add his signature.
193:
The diary of
Bulstrode Whitelocke, 1605–1675, ed. R. Spalding, British Academy, Records of Social and Economic History, new ser., 13 (1990)
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K. Roberts, ‘Citizen soldiers: the military power of the city of London’, London and the civil war, ed. S. Porter (1996)
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82:. In 1661 he was found guilty, but instead of a capital punishment his assets were seized and he was imprisoned in
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67:. In 1655 he was placed under arrest for misappropriation of Army funds, fined and stripped of public office.
75:
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in contemporary
Parliamentary records e.g. Journal of the House of Lords: volume 11: 1660-1666, pp. 51-53,
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176:
by H.C.G. Matthew (Editor), Brian
Harrison (Editor) (2004). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,
63:, as most Presbyterians opposed this action as well as the trial of the king. In 1654 he was MP for
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C. H. Firth and R. S. Rait, eds., Acts and ordinances of the interregnum, 1642–1660, 3 vols. (1911)
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I. Gentles, The New Model Army in
England, Ireland, and Scotland, 1645–1653 (1992)
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T. Verax , Anarchia
Anglicana, or, The history of independency, pt 2 (1649)
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The state's servants: the civil service of the
English republic, 1649–1660
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Ivan Roots &, S.M.Wynne. "Harvey, Edmund (c.1601–1673), regicide".
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D. Underdown, Pride's Purge: politics in the puritan revolution (1971)
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R. Spalding, Contemporaries of
Bulstrode Whitelocke, 1605–1675 (1990)
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Proclamation for apprehending the late King's Judges (4 June 1660)
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184:. Ivan Roots and S. M. Wynne. "Harvey, Edmund" cites
236:F. T. K., ‘Harvey, Edmund’, HoP, Commons, 1640–60
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38:, who sat as a commissioner at the Trial of King
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199:B. Worden, The Rump Parliament, 1648–1653 (1974)
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90:. He died there in June 1673 and was buried in
218:G. Edwards, The last days of Charles I (1998)
253:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
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227:S. Barber, Regicide and republicanism (1998)
143:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
34:soldier and member of Parliament during the
16:For other people named Edmund Harvey, see
329:English people who died in prison custody
134:"Harvey, Edmund (c.1601–1673), regicide"
334:English politicians convicted of crimes
250:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
140:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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294:Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
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131:Ivan Roots &, S.M.Wynne (2004).
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74:he was denied amnesty under the
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18:Edmund Harvey (disambiguation)
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76:Act of Indemnity and Oblivion
267:UK public library membership
164:UK public library membership
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205:Clarendon, Hist. rebellion
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57:Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire
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314:Regicides of Charles I
259:10.1093/ref:odnb/12513
149:10.1093/ref:odnb/12513
119:British History Online
324:English MPs 1654–1655
319:English MPs 1640–1648
30:(c.1601–1673) was an
221:State trials, vol. 5
99:References and notes
78:and was tried as a
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40:Charles I
92:Falmouth
88:Cornwall
80:regicide
70:At the
32:English
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215:(1973)
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156:2011
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